Pubdate: Sat, 20 May 2006 Source: Economist, The (UK) Copyright: 2006 The Economist Newspaper Limited Contact: http://www.economist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/132 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Brazil THE MOB TAKES ON THE STATE A Prison Gang Shows Its Deadly Power and Flatfoots The Politicians RIO DE JANEIRO is more beautiful, but residents of Sao Paulo boast that their city is safer. At least they did until May 12th, when a wave of violence orchestrated from within the prison system struck Brazil's biggest city and several neighbouring towns. In five days of mayhem and retribution some 150 people, a quarter of them policemen, were killed; 82 buses were torched and 17 bank branches attacked. Rebellions erupted at 74 of the 140 prisons in Sao Paulo state. Schools, shopping centres and offices shut down; transport froze. For several days, paulistanos could not even claim that their city was safer than Baghdad. It was a show of force by the leaders of the state's main criminal gang, the Primeiro Comando da Capital. Directing the violence by mobile phone from their prison cells, they cast sudden doubt on whether Sao Paulo, the engine of Brazil's economy, is ruled by laws or by the mob. This is sure to be an issue in October's presidential election, which pits the incumbent, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, against Geraldo Alckmin. As governor of Sao Paulo until March, it is Mr Alckmin who has carried the chief political responsibility for its security. In Rio, it is widely known that three gangs battle each other and the police for control of the slums and the drug trade. Sao Paulo's drug trade has been more fragmented, and its Primeiro Comando a more shadowy presence. But contrary to some claims, the Comando has gathered strength. It has taken control of drug dealing and infiltrated youth detention centres. It seems to be colonising the criminal underworld, replacing individual initiative with organised enterprise, says Sergio Adorno of Sao Paulo's Nucleus for the Study of Violence. That generally requires the connivance of public authorities. Tulio Kahn, of Sao Paulo's public-security secretariat, says the Comando's fluid structure is more like al-Qaeda's than that of a tightly-run mafia. Its habitat remains the prisons. Its top boss, Marcola, who began his career, aged nine, as a pickpocket, has been in jail since 1999. His followers call him "Playboy" because of his fondness for designer clothing. In 2001 the Comando staged a multi-prison rebellion and in 2003 it murdered an unpopular judge. But nothing foreshadowed this week's reign of terror. It proved that the Comando could strike at will, like a well-drilled army, and bring Sao Paulo almost to a halt. The shock was all the greater because violent crime has been declining. Between 1999 and 2005 the murder rate in Sao Paulo state dropped from 35 per 100,000 people to 18. The offensive seems to have been provoked by the transfer of 765 of the Comando's adherents to a more remote jail. An earlier demand was for 60 television sets to watch next month's soccer World Cup. Mr Kahn argues that the Comando may have reacted to a recent crackdown, which included the creation of an inter-agency group to take on the gang. But the Comando's murderous tantrum also points to something amiss in the way Brazil punishes criminals. The approach is at once unduly harsh and absurdly lenient. Prisoners may be denied television but can use their mobile phones to extort money. The jails have become more crowded since 1990, when a federal law mandated prison sentences for selling drugs, no matter how small the quantity. Sao Paulo embraced this with gusto. Its prison population has more than doubled since 1994. But prison building lagged--the system has 35% more inmates than places. Some of the hastily trained guards became prisoners' accomplices. Inmates are supposed to work, study and receive decent healthcare--but many do not. "Prisons are becoming centres of criminality," says Sergio Mazina of IBCCRIM, a research institute. The state government has now brought calm, but is accused of doing so with the same mixture of indulgence and harshness that caused the trouble. It denies reports that it made a deal with Marcola, yielding on the televisions and other privileges. A police counter-offensive has so far killed 93 "aggressors"--hardly an advertisement for the rule of law. The debate provoked by the Comando's outrages pits popular demands for toughness against pleas for a more nuanced approach to criminals. More sensible proposals include transferring gang leaders to jails out of range of telephone transmission towers. State officials say that the declining murder rate (until this week) shows that incarceration is working. Claudio Lembo, Sao Paulo's interim governor, wants to record conversations between prisoners and lawyers, who often pass on messages. The bar association rejects this as illegal. Galvanised by the crisis, Brazil's Congress is considering the creation of an intelligence service to fight corruption in the jails, which might be useful, and the introduction of solitary confinement for up to two years, which might not be. It would be better to spring-clean the prisons. "A third or fewer prisoners really have to be there," says Julita Lemgruber, a sociologist at the Universidade Candido Mendes in Rio de Janeiro. If the rest were punished in less drastic ways, they would be removed from the influence of the worst criminals. That would require new laws and more discriminating judges. To fight organised crime, police forces need to become more adept at investigation rather than mere repression. Do not expect anything but tough talk from the presidential candidates. President Lula left it to an aide to suggest that Mr Alckmin had sown the seeds of chaos. Mr Alckmin slammed the federal government for cutting spending on public security. But at least now neither of them can dodge the subject of crime. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake